Airstrike takes out official who commanded foreign insurgents and directed attacks

KABUL, Afghanistan 
The U.S.-led NATO force in Afghanistan killed al-Qaeda’s second-highest leader in the country in an airstrike in eastern Kunar province, the coalition said Tuesday.

Sakhr al-Taifi, also known as Mushtaq and Nasim, was responsible for commanding foreign insurgents in Afghanistan and directing attacks against NATO and Afghan forces, the alliance said.

He frequently traveled between Afghanistan and Pakistan, carrying out commands from senior al-Qaeda leadership and ferrying in weapons and fighters.

The airstrike that killed al-Taifi and another al-Qaeda militant took place Sunday in Kunar’s Watahpur district, the coalition said. An assessment of the area determined that no civilians were harmed, it said.

The coalition declined to reveal the name of al-Qaeda’s top leader in Afghanistan “due to ongoing operations and security concerns.”

A spokesman for the International Security Assistance Force’s Joint Command, Capt. Justin Brockhoff, said al-Taifi had connections with Taliban leaders “and exercised influence on them,” as well as controlling “multiple al-Qaeda terrorists.”

He said the military’s information came from “information gathered through combined intelligence gathering.”

The U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan was carried out because al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden used the country as his base to plan the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in New York and Washington.

Most of al-Qaeda’s senior leaders are believed to be based in Pakistan, where they fled following the U.S.-led invasion. The terrorist organization is believed to have a nominal presence in Afghanistan today.

Many senior al-Qaeda commanders have died in U.S. drone attacks in Pakistan’s northwest tribal region, and bin Laden was killed by U.S. commandos in the Pakistani town of Abbottabad last May.

Bin Laden advised al-Qaeda militants to leave Pakistan’s North and South Waziristan tribal areas because of the threat of drone attacks, according to letters seized from the compound where he was killed. The documents were released by the United States.

In one of the letters, bin Laden recommended they go to Afghanistan’s Kunar province because of “its rougher terrain; too many mountains, rivers, and trees that can accommodate hundreds of brothers without being spotted by the enemy,” according to the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point, which published the documents.

Elsewhere in Afghanistan, two would-be suicide bombers riding in a vehicle packed with explosives in eastern Nangarhar province were killed when the vehicle exploded prematurely, said a local government official.